Welcome to New Orleans, LA! Downtown New Orleans Hotels offers great rates on over 50 hotels near downtown New Orleans. All of our hotels have been approved by AAA and the Mobile Travel Guide, the authorities in hotel inspection. All hotels offer a generous savings off of regular hotel rack rates. Book securely online for great rates on hotels near downtown New Orleans!

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Featured Downtown New Orleans Hotels:

InterContinental New Orleans
InterContinental New Orleans is a business-friendly hotel located in central New Orleans, close to Lafayette Square, Riverwalk Marketplace, and Bourbon Street. Additional points of interest include Jackson Square and Louisiana Superdome. Dining options at InterContinental New Orleans include a restaurant and a bar/lounge.... more

Holiday Inn New Orleans Downtown SuperdomeIdeally located in the heart of Downtown New Orleans, our hotel is near the Louisiana Superdome, New Orleans Arena and French Quarter. Enjoy the hotel's complimentary shuttle to the French Quarter, Harrah's Casino, Audubon Aquarium of the Americas,... more.

About New Orleans

New Orleans, Louisiana, languishes along the banks of the Mississippi River surrounded by Lake Pontchartrain and the Gulf of Mexico. The city winds along the bend of the river hence its nickname, The Crescent City. Its other moniker, The Big Easy, is not quite as easy to explain. Some believe the name derives from the city's easy, laid back, let-the-good-times-roll attitude. Others insist the title originated in the 1920s. During Prohibition, when the sale and distribution of liquor was illegal, drinking establishments, or "speakeasies," popped up all over the city.

Also known as the birthplace of jazz, New Orleans draws its musical influences from its multicultural and multilingual heritage. New Orleans was founded in 1718, by the French and named after French Regent, Philippe d'Orléans, Duke of Orléans. The United States acquired the territory in 1803 through the Louisiana Purchase.

During the Revolutionary War, the Port of New Orleans provided an entry point for smuggling arms to revolutionists. During the Antebellum Era, it was an important point of entry for slave and commodity traders. Goods that entered the Port were transferred to smaller vessels and launched up the Mississippi River. Large volumes of commodities were exported out of the port as well. The busy port attracted people of French, Creole, Spanish, Irish, German and Caribbean descent. Cultures, cuisine and traditions blended to form an ambiance – a joie de vivre – that continues to attract people from all over the world.

Despite the flourishing slave trade, New Orleans was home to a large group of well-educated, French-speaking people of color (gens de couleur libres) who had never known the bonds of slavery. They were instrumental in fighting against Jim Crow laws. Homer Plessy, whose arrest for boarding a whites-only commuter train led to the Supreme Court decision of Plessy v. Ferguson, was a resident of New Orleans. His final resting place in the famous St. Louis Cemetery is an obligatory stop for history buffs.

In the early 20th century, the French Quarter became a mecca for artists and bohemians. Today, the French Quarter is an eclectic mixture of historic ornate colonial and Victorian architecture, mysterious Voodoo charm, quaint Southern hospitality and modern-day quirkiness. The French Quarter may be the most visited and oldest section of New Orleans, but it is not the only district worth exploring. Faubourg Marigny, the Warehouse and Arts District, the Garden District and Magazine Street abound with delightful discoveries for anyone venturing about its streets and alleyways.